Orange Is the New Black’s Uzo Aduba Recalls the Unexpected Person Who Taught Her to Love Her Tooth Gap (Exclusive)

Mar. 15, 2025

Uzo Aduba at SiriusXM studios in N.Y.C. on Aug. 26, 2024.Photo:Jason Mendez/Getty

Uzo Aduba

Jason Mendez/Getty

Uzo Adubaskyrocketed to fame asOrange Is the New Black’s Crazy Eyes, but the actress wants people to know what happened before — and after — she ended up in Litchfield Penitentiary.

In her upcoming memoirThe Road Is Good: How a Mother’s Strength Became a Daughter’s Purpose(out Sept. 24), Aduba, 43, honors her mother Nonyem, who died in November 2020 from pancreatic cancer, and recounts growing up as a Nigerian American in a predominately white Massachusetts suburb, discovering her love of acting, studying her craft at Boston University and pursuing her dreams in New York City before landing her breakout role inOrange Is the New Black.

She also talks about meeting her husbandRobert Sweetingafter years of struggling to date in N.Y.C. and tying the knot with the filmmaker in anintimate backyard weddingin September 2020 so her mom could see them say “I do” before she died.

“I’m excited to share my story,” Aduba tells PEOPLE in this week’s issue. “I hope that people see themselves in this story, whether it’s because you’re from an immigrant family or you felt like you stood outside of something.”

Uzo Aduba circa 1994.Uzo Aduba/Instagram

Uzo Aduba

Uzo Aduba/Instagram

“It’s such a big part of who I am,” the Emmy winner says. “Being first-generation is so much a part of the identity of anybody who is from somewhere else. Whether that’s my mom’s experience of what it’s like for her to come to America as a Nigerian immigrant, or it’s helping to contextualize who I am and what my American experience was like growing up in this very, very much American neighborhood, it’s impossible to separate the Nigeria that I was experiencing at home and how that informs my identity today, how I’ve come to parts of myself that I once pushed away or rejected and then fully accepted.”

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In an excerpt fromThe Road Is Good— the English translation of Aduba’s full Igbo first name, Uzoamaka — she opens up about feeling self-conscious about the gap between her two front teeth and how she came to love her appearance.

The cover of Uzo Aduba’s upcoming memoir ‘The Road Is Good: How a Mother’s Strength Became a Daughter’s Purpose’.Viking, an imprint of Penguin Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House, LLC

The Road Is Good: How a Mother’s Strength Became a Daughter’s Purpose

Viking, an imprint of Penguin Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House, LLC

I didn’t care, as a teenager, that the space between my two front teeth — the Anyaoku gap, as my family called it — was a sign of beauty and wisdom in Africa. All my friends had braces, and they’d come off revealing straight, “perfect” teeth. My mother ignored all my pleas for the orthodontist, so I stopped smiling in public and especially in photos. I practiced speaking with my mouth mostly closed too.

For my senior class photos, I chose a few different outfits, and I borrowed a pair of my mother’s earrings. I got on well with the photographer — a nice guy who put me at ease during the session, even cracking a few jokes along the way. Then, at one point, he lowered his camera.

For more on Uzo Aduba, pick up the latest issue of PEOPLE, on newsstands Friday, or subscribehere.

“Why do you keep making that face in pictures?” he asked. He lifted the corners of his mouth in an imitation, as if something sour were under my tongue.

“I don’t know,” I said.

“Really, why?” asked the photographer. “Why aren’t you smiling?” He kept pressing until I had no choice.

“I don’t like my gap,” I muttered. He studied me for a moment and then said, “I think you have a beautiful smile.”

While I can’t say exactly what changed in me, I was born that day. I didn’t give up a single flash of teeth for the photos, but I still walked away believing it, for the first time: I have a beautiful smile.

My mother hated it when I told this story. “Your entire life,” I can hear her say. “I told you your entire life.” Sorry: For whatever reason, this guy said it, and I was proud.

The Road Is Good: How a Mother’s Strength Became a Daughter’s Purposewill be released Sept. 24 from Viking, an imprint of Penguin Random House, and is available for preorder now, wherever books are sold.

source: people.com